PC Atomic Sync 4.0
| Developer: |
Brigsoft (more products...) |
| OS: | Win95/98/ME/NT 4.x/2000/XP/2003/ Vista Starter/ Vista Home Basic/ Vista Home Premium/ Vista Business/ Vista Enterprise/ Vista Ultimate/ Vista Home Basic x64/ Vista Home Premium x64/ Vista Business x64 |
| License: | Shareware |
| Price: |
$10 (Buy it now)
|
| Size: | 0.77 MB |
| Rating: | Rate this program: |
|
|
|
(*) It is an atomic clock synchronizer with some useful features (time offset, synchronize periods, etc.). The main idea of the program is to synchronize your PC's clock in the most reliable and resource-saving way.
(*) The unique Time Offset feature of the program allows setting up your PC clock to gain or to lose for a specified interval. Many our users value this feature greatly.
(*) Clock in your PC needs to be corrected only several times a month. And it is this fact that defines the way the program works: the program runs when Windows starts, checks whether synchronization has been done this day already, and stops immediately if so. Otherwise the program checks for Internet connection, then tries to synchronize your clock and ends its work if succeeded. So as you see mostly the program is idle and is not wasting resources of your PC. Synchronization is done automatically while you are receiving your e-mail or surfing the web and no actions are to be done by you.
(*) The program features noteworthy reliability. You can specify the correction period during which the program should synchronize your clock. If it fails user gets a warning notification message.
(*) Changing system DST (daylight saving time) settings .
(*) This program uses the list of 19 presetting atomic time servers, that are situated all over the world (USA, UK, Australia, France, Germany etc.). They are open NTP (Network Time Protocol) servers. If one of the servers does not work the program chooses another. There is a procedure that tests all servers and shows network delays for them. User can add additional servers to the list. It is really important only for professional users. Any server allows you synchronize your computer with precision less then 0.1 sec with high probability.
(*) As a result you don't have to do anything, mostly the program is not wasting resources of your PC but your PC clock always shows you precise time. |
|
|
Latest news:
Python update makes break with past (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 08:40:34 -0800)
Python 3.0 is a major change from the Python 2 series, and the first release that is intentionally backwards-incompatible. Python developers on Wednesday released the final version of Python 3.0, a major reworking of the programming language that is incompatible with the Python 2 series. Python...
The weirdest computing disasters of 2008 (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 05:12:55 -0800)
Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters. Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters. The top 10...
Roadmap: Open source to take over mainstream IT (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 12:46:14 -0800)
Open source-based IT jobs will grow and the cloud will be ubiquitous, as long as the community takes certain steps, according to a roadmap from the Open World Forum. Within the next 12 years, 40 percent of IT jobs will be related to open source, and open-source-based cloud computing...
Oracle adds data-integrity code to Linux kernel (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 08:00:52 -0800)
The enterprise-software company has collaborated with networking-hardware company Emulex to produce Linux kernel data-integrity code. Oracle has announced that it has contributed data-integrity code to the Linux kernel. The open-source code, which has been accepted into the Linux 2.6.27 kernel, is designed to reduce data corruption...
40 percent of IT jobs will be in open source, study (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 05:45:01 -0800)
By 2020, the cloud will have taken over, and open source will rule in the cloud - with the result that 40 percent of IT jobs will be related to open source, according to a report. By 2020, the cloud will have taken over, and open source will rule...
|
|
|